TECHNICAL FIELD
[0001] The present disclosure is related generally to vehicle interiors and, more particularly,
to instrument panels and other vehicle interior panels having a substrate, foam layer,
and decorative layer.
BACKGROUND
[0002] Weight reduction in vehicles is a common goal in the automotive industry. Accordingly,
decreasing the thickness of more rigid parts such as substrates in vehicle interior
panels can help reduce weight. However, reducing the thickness of the substrate can
result in undesirable warpage when the panel is formed, foamed, or molded.
JP 2009208574 to Yasushi addresses thermal warpage of an installed instrument panel, but does not contemplate
the issue of creating a thin-walled substrate that is more susceptible to deflection
during manufacture in particular.
SUMMARY
[0003] An illustrative vehicle interior panel such as an instrument panel includes a substrate
having a thickness between 0.5 mm and 2.25 mm, inclusive, a decorative layer, and
an intermediate layer located between the substrate and the decorative layer. A post-form
warpage of the substrate is less than 15 mm at an edge region of the substrate.
[0004] In various embodiments, the edge region is a windshield edge and the post-form warpage
is in a Z direction.
[0005] In various embodiments, a serpentine rib located near the windshield edge.
[0006] In various embodiments, an extension flange is located at least partially between
the windshield edge and the serpentine rib.
[0007] In various embodiments, the extension flange extends out from the windshield edge
in an X direction and the serpentine rib projects from the extension flange in the
Z direction.
[0008] In various embodiments, the serpentine rib is located along a majority of a distal
edge of the extension flange.
[0009] In various embodiments, the windshield edge has a primary arc, the extension flange
has a primary arc, and the serpentine rib has a primary arc, and each primary arc
is configured to match a contour of a windshield.
[0010] In various embodiments, the serpentine rib includes a plurality of undulations.
[0011] In various embodiments, each undulation has a peak and the peak is an angle between
30° and 60°, inclusive.
[0012] In various embodiments, the plurality of undulations includes more than 20 undulations.
[0013] In various embodiments, each undulation has an amplitude and a wavelength, and a
ratio of the amplitude to the wavelength is between 1:6 and 1:2, inclusive.
[0014] In various embodiments, there is a method of manufacturing the vehicle interior panel,
comprising the steps of molding the substrate and foaming a foam layer between the
decorative layer and the substrate to form the intermediate layer.
[0015] In various embodiments, the substrate is molded with a serpentine rib.
[0016] In various embodiments, the serpentine rib is located on an extension flange.
[0017] In various embodiments, the method includes the step of removing the serpentine rib
and the extension flange after the foaming step.
[0018] It is contemplated that any number of the individual features or steps of the above-described
embodiments and of any other embodiments depicted in the drawings or description below
can be combined in any combination to define an invention, except where features or
steps are incompatible.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019] Illustrative embodiments will hereinafter be described in conjunction with the following
figures, wherein like numerals denote like elements, and wherein:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the interior of a vehicle passenger cabin showing
example vehicle interior panels, such as an instrument panel;
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of a portion of the instrument panel of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a computer-aided engineering (CAE) model of a prior art substrate;
FIG. 4 is a CAE model of an embodiment of a substrate for the instrument panel depicted
in the figures and described herein;
FIG. 5 is side view of the substrate of FIGS. 1, 2, and 4, showing its serpentine
rib;
FIG. 6 a top view of the substrate of FIGS. 1, 2, 4, and 5; and
FIG. 7 is an enlarged view of a portion of the serpentine rib of FIGS. 1, 2, and 4-6.
DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS
[0020] Described herein is a vehicle interior panel that is particularly configured to reduce
manufacture-related warpage in thin-walled substrates. Typical substrate thicknesses
for vehicle interior panels are between 2.5 and 4 mm. Thin-walled substrates are about
2.0 mm, or between about 0.5-2.25 mm. The thin-walled substrates help promote vehicle
weight reduction. However, these thin-walled structures are more susceptible to warpage
during manufacture. For example, when subjected to a foaming process to introduce
a foam layer between the substrate and a decorative layer, a certain degree of post-form
warpage can be present. With thin-walled substrates that are between 0.5-2.25 mm in
particular, the degree of post-form warpage can make the part unsuitable for installation
and/or performance in the vehicle. This post-form warpage is present before the panel
is installed in the vehicle, and thus is different than thermal warpage that may occur
after installation. With substrates that fall into the standard thickness range between
2.5 and 4 mm, the post-form warpage amount does not make the part unsuitable. The
panels and manufacturing methods described herein strategically minimize the amount
of post-form warpage in a thin-walled substrate by including a serpentine rib to help
structurally support and improve the rigidity of the substrate body during manufacture.
[0021] FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an interior of a passenger cabin 10 of a vehicle
12 having an interior panel 14 that is manufactured in accordance with the methodology
described below. The interior panel 14 is an instrument panel 16. As will be detailed
further, warpage along a windshield edge 18 of the instrument panel 16 can be particularly
problematic, especially with thin-walled substrates. However, the structures and methods
disclosed herein may be used in the manufacture of other interior panels, such as
one or more panels for the center console 20, armrest 22, door panel 24, or one or
more storage compartments 26, to cite a few examples. Accordingly, while the discussion
below is focused on the instrument panel 16 implementation, the teachings may also
be applicable to other vehicle interior panels.
[0022] FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional, schematic view of a portion of an embodiment of the
vehicle interior panel 14, or more particularly, the instrument panel 16. The vehicle
interior panel 14 includes a decorative layer 28, a substrate 30, and an intermediate
or foam layer 32 between the decorative layer and the substrate. Adhesive or bonding
layers can be included between two or more of the various layers or components of
the interior panel 14. Further, other layers may be included in addition to those
particularly described, such as one or more protective outer layers, fabric interlayers,
conductive electronic layers, or other functional and/or aesthetic layers.
[0023] The decorative layer 28 has a decorative side 34, which is the side of the panel
14 lining the interior of the passenger cabin 10 when installed in the vehicle 12.
The decorative layer 28 can be a single layer, or it may have a multi-layer structure
(e.g., a wood sheet complex having a fabric interlayer and one or more protective
outer layers). Other materials for the decorative layer are certainly possible, such
as fiber-containing resins, leather, or a polymer skin layer, to cite a few examples.
When a resin component is included in the decorative layer, it may be colored or tinted
for additional contrast or visual interest. The decorative layer 28 may have a thickness
in a range from 0.5 mm to 2.5 mm, or preferably from 0.5 mm to 1.5 mm. In one example,
the thickness of the decorative layer 28 is between 0.6 mm and 1.0 mm, or about 0.8
mm. Other thickness ranges and configurations are certainly possible. For example,
the decorative layer 28 may be thicker in certain regions than others, or it may have
a curved or non-planar shape.
[0024] The substrate 30 is semi-rigid and generally defines the overall shape and structure
of the panel 14. An example of a suitable semi-rigid construction is injection molded
glass-reinforced polypropylene having a wall thickness T in a range from 0.5 to 2.25
mm. This thin-walled structure is distinguishable from typical substrates having a
thickness in the range of 2.5 mm to 4.0 mm (standard-walled). Without the structural
modifications described herein, the thin-walled structures falling into the range
of 0.5 to 2.25 mm can suffer from a high degree of post-form warpage, which can be
particularly detrimental in larger panels, such as the instrument panel 16. Along
longer edges, such as the windshield edge 18, this post-form warpage can be even more
pronounced in the thin-walled structures. Minimizing this post-form warpage can result
in a more structurally sound thin-walled substrate 30. The post-form warpage may be
a result of the injection molding process, which causes internal stress in the substrate
30. If, for example, there is post-form warpage that varies the shape of the substrate
30 from the nominal CAD model, sometimes, putting the substrate on the foaming tool
lid will help bring the part back to nominal. However, after the part is foamed, the
injected substrate 30 has memory and will warp back to its original state.
[0025] While injection molded plastic is a preferred material for the substrate 30, other
materials and combinations of materials exhibiting similar shape-maintaining characteristics
may be used. The substrate 30 is described as semi-rigid to distinguish from perfectly
rigid (i.e., entirely inflexible), but should be sufficiently rigid to support its
own weight and the weight of the decorative layer 28 and the intermediate or foam
layer 32, along with any other attached components, without noticeable sagging or
bending. The substrate 30 should be able to endure severe temperature extremes without
changing shape, and should not exhibit brittle fractures in vehicle collision scenarios.
In some embodiments, the panel 14 is a relatively small subpanel of a larger interior
panel, in which case, an unreinforced plastic material can be used for the substrate
30. The illustrated substrate 30 also includes reference positioners 36 on the outer
side 38 used to position and fix the substrate and any attached layers or components
in a repeatable location during manufacture. The outer side 38 generally faces away
from the interior cabin 10 of the vehicle 12, while the inner side 40 generally faces
toward the interior cabin. The reference positioners 36 on the outer side 38 illustrated
in FIG. 2 are but one example of suitable positioners. The substrate 30 may also include
one or more substrate openings for the insertion of foam material for the foam layer
32.
[0026] The intermediate layer 32 is advantageously a foam layer that can assist the decorative
layer 28 in providing desired tactile characteristics to the panel 14 in the form
of elastic cushioning that compresses when a force is applied to the outer decorative
side 34 of the panel 14 and decompresses when the force is removed to return the decorative
layer to its original position. The foam layer 32 can also provide sound deadening
and/or have a non-uniform thickness to fill space between the decorative layer 28
and the substrate 30 when the respective contours of the decorative layer and substrate
are different from each other. In the illustrated example, the foam layer 32 is a
backfilled or a closed pour, foam-in-place material layer formed by introducing a
foam material, such as a liquid foam precursor, into a space between the decorative
layer 28 and the substrate 30, with at least the decorative layer constrained in the
desired final shape in a foam molding tool. The foam material expands to fill and
take the shape of the space and cures to form the foam layer 32. One suitable foam
layer material is polyurethane foam formed from a liquid precursor material comprising
a polyol and a diisocyanate. Other foam materials (e.g., polyolefin-based) are possible,
as are other foaming processes (e.g., use of a heat-activated foaming agent). The
foam layer 32 may range in thickness from 1 mm to 10 mm, can be separately provided
and adhered with adjacent material layers. In other embodiments, the intermediate
layer 32 may be a fabric spacer or some other material layer that spaces the decorative
layer 28 from the substrate 30.
[0027] FIGS. 3 and 4 are CAE mold flow analyses that show the post-form warpage 42 that
can occur during manufacture and be present after the foam layer 32 is introduced
between the substrate 30 and the decorative layer 28. Manufacturing the substrate
30 can cause undesirable post-form warpage if the substrate thickness (at least along
the edge) is between 0.5 and 2.25 mm. FIG. 3 shows the overall structure of a prior
art substrate 30' having a thin-walled structure of 2 mm. The CAE model shows the
large deflection or warp, and along the windshield edge 18', there is an area of post-form
warpage 42' that is about 18 mm (see scale on right side of FIG. 3) in the Z direction.
This amount of post-form warpage 42', particularly at the windshield edge 18' in the
Z direction, can cause performance and/or installation problems. Advantageously, the
amount of post-form warpage 42 should be less than 15 mm, or more particularly, less
than 10 mm. This amount of post-form warpage 42 makes the interior panel 14 suitable
for proper mating against the windshield 44 of the vehicle 12. The XYZ axes are shown
in the figures and correspond to the vehicle's longitudinal, lateral, and vertical
axes once the panel 14 is installed in the vehicle 12.
[0028] In the FIG. 4 embodiment, the substrate 30 has a post-form warpage 42 along the windshield
edge 18 that is about 8 mm (see scale on right side of FIG. 4). Accordingly, the CAE
modelling shows a 10 mm warp improvement in this particular embodiment. The post-form
warpage 42 is the amount of warpage or deflection present at the edge region (or more
particularly, at the windshield edge 18 or an alternate edge depending on the panel)
before the panel 14 is installed in the vehicle 12. Thus, the post-form warpage 42
can be measured by comparing the degree of warpage in the substrate 30 after it is
fully manufactured (pre-install) with the nominal CAD data or the mold dimensions.
The manufactured panels 14 can be scanned in a lab or gun-sighted, to cite a few examples,
to ascertain the amount of post-form warpage 42 that is present. In another example,
the panels 14, before install, can be analyzed with a coordinate measuring machine
(CMM) and the output is compared against the nominal CAD and/or a geometric dimensioning
and tolerancing (GD&T) system. In the illustrated embodiment, the post-form warpage
42 is the degree of warpage in the Z direction; however, with other vehicle panels,
it may be desirable to control the degree of post-form warpage in other directions,
depending on the way in which the panel is installed in the vehicle.
[0029] To achieve a suitable, minimal level of post-form warpage 42 on a thin-walled substrate
having a thickness between 0.5 and 2.25 mm, or more particularly 2 mm in the illustrated
embodiment, an edge region 46 near the windshield edge 18 is structurally modified
to help impart rigidity to counteract the forces applied to the substrate 30 during
manufacture. The edge region 46 includes the windshield edge 18 or another panel edge,
an extension flange 48, and a serpentine rib 50. As detailed further below, the serpentine
rib 50 can be integrally molded with a main body 52 of the substrate 30. The substrate
30 is then put in a mold with the decorative layer 28, and the panel 14, 16 is foamed
to create the foam layer 32. The serpentine rib 50 is then removed before the panel
14, 16 is installed in the vehicle 12. In embodiments that include the serpentine
rib 50 on an extension flange 48, the extension flange 48 may also be removed before
the panel 14, 16 is installed in the vehicle 12. Removal can be accomplished via punching
or milling, to cite a few examples.
[0030] FIGS. 5to 7 more particularly illustrate the substrate 30 and the structural features
of the edge region 46 such as the extension flange 48 and the serpentine rib 50. The
extension flange 48 starts at the windshield edge 18 and continues to a distal edge
54 where the serpentine rib 50 is located. The extension flange 48 can help keep the
substrate 30 in the line of draw of the injection mold. The extension flange 48 has
a primary arc 56 which corresponds in shape to the primary arc 58 of the windshield
edge 18, which matches the contour of the windshield 44 in the vehicle 12. The serpentine
rib 50 also has a primary arc 60 which matches the contour of the primary arc 56,
the primary arc 58, and the contour of the windshield 44. Each primary arc 56, 58,
60 is a single central curve that is configured to mimic the contour of the windshield
44.
[0031] The extension flange 48 defines most of the area of the edge region 46 and extends
from the windshield edge 18 toward the distal edge 54. The extension flange 48 may
have a different thickness than the thickness T of the substrate main body 52, or
it may have the same thickness. The extension flange 48 provides a small, generally
planar area along the windshield edge 18 that can be milled, punched, or otherwise
removed after the panel 14, 16 is foamed. In some embodiments, the extension flange
48 is located at an angle with respect to the body 52 at the windshield edge 18. This,
or scribe lines for example, can help demarcate the area to be removed after foaming
and help create a cut line or indicator at the windshield edge 18.
[0032] The serpentine rib 50 is located along a majority, or in this embodiment, an entirety
of the distal edge 54 of the extension flange 48. This arrangement provides increased
structural rigidity at the edge region 46, which can decrease the post-form warpage
42 in the Z direction at the windshield edge 18 so it is at a suitable amount (e.g.,
less than 15 mm or less than 10 mm, preferably). The serpentine rib 50 has a corrugated,
sinusoidal shape with a plurality of undulations 62 (only a few are labeled for clarity
purposes, and in the enlarged view of FIG. 7, each undulation is labeled as 62a-f).
In this embodiment, there are no spaces between the undulations 62, as each undulation
goes straight into another undulation without breaks or straight gap portions between
neighboring undulations. To be considered a "serpentine" rib, the rib needs to have
three or more undulations that are uninterrupted by a straight or gap portion. Thus,
with respect to the prior art embodiment shown in FIG. 3, this would not be a serpentine
rib because there are straight gap portions between each undulation located on the
windshield edge 18'.
[0033] The serpentine rib 50 projects up from the extension flange 48 in the Z direction,
but it is possible to locate the serpentine rib 50 in different locations beyond that
shown explicitly in the figures. For example, the serpentine rib could project down
from the extension flange 48, also in the Z direction. Or, the serpentine rib 50 may
not be located on the extension flange 48. In some embodiments the serpentine rib
50 could be located on the outer side 38 and/or inner side 40 along the main body
portion 52 of the substrate 30. If, for example, the serpentine rib 50 is located
on the outer side 38, it could then be milled or otherwise removed down to the outer
side after foaming. The serpentine rib 50 may be completely orthogonal with respect
to the extension flange 48, or it may be angled (up to 25 degrees either way along
the X axis from what is illustrated in the figures may still be considered to be extending
in the Z direction). Projecting in the Z direction can make it easier to remove in
a subsequent milling or punching operation.
[0034] The number of undulations 62 in the serpentine rib 50 will vary depending on the
size and shape of the part being formed. In the illustrated embodiment, with a larger
panel 14 such as the instrument panel 16, more undulations are needed to help maintain
the structural integrity of the larger edge 18. Accordingly, more than 40 undulations
are preferred with a panel comparable in size to an instrument panel. Other smaller
panels will likely have less undulations. In some embodiments, however, smaller panels
can have a comparable number of undulations to what is illustrated, just with a smaller
pitch or wavelength λ.
[0035] With particular reference to FIG. 7, the serpentine rib 50 begins at the distal edge
54 and extends up to a top terminal edge 64 with the sinusoidal wall 65 extending
therebetween. Each undulation 62 includes a peak 66 and a trough 68 with a sloped
wall 70 located between the peak and the trough (only one undulation 62b is labeled
with subcomponents for clarity purposes, but the teachings relating to the undulation
62b are also applicable to the other undulations as well). As discussed above, the
plurality of undulations 62 are continuous, meaning that there is no straight gap
or the like between adjoining undulations such that the sinusoidal wall 65 goes from
peak 66 to sloped wall 70 to trough 68 to sloped wall to peak, etc. The peak angle
α is between about 30° and 60° inclusive, or more particularly 45°. Having a peak
angle α of 45°, as well as a trough angle of 45° as illustrated, can provide a more
symmetrical structure that can be easier to manufacture.
[0036] In an advantageous embodiment, the ratio of the amplitude A to the pitch or wavelength
λ is between 1:6 and 1:2, or more particularly in the illustrated embodiment, 1:4.
In this embodiment in particular, the amplitude A is about 7 mm, and the wavelength
is about 28 mm. This arrangement, again, can be easier to manufacture, particularly
when integrally forming the serpentine rib 50 with the substrate 30 in an injection
molding process. One potential reason for this is that the modifications needed in
the tooling can be less cumbersome when creating this particularly sized serpentine
rib 50. These configurations for the undulations 62 were designed to strategically
control the post-form warpage 42, and verified using CAE mold flow analysis and injection
trials.
[0037] It is to be understood that the foregoing is a description of one or more embodiments
of the invention. The invention is not limited to the particular embodiment(s) disclosed
herein, but rather is defined solely by the claims below. Furthermore, the statements
contained in the foregoing description relate to particular embodiments and are not
to be construed as limitations on the scope of the invention or on the definition
of terms used in the claims, except where a term or phrase is expressly defined above.
Various other embodiments and various changes and modifications to the disclosed embodiment(s)
will become apparent to those skilled in the art. All such other embodiments, changes,
and modifications are intended to come within the scope of the appended claims.
[0038] As used in this specification and claims, the terms "e.g.," "for example," "for instance,"
"such as," and "like," and the verbs "comprising," "having," "including," and their
other verb forms, when used in conjunction with a listing of one or more components
or other items, are each to be construed as open-ended, meaning that the listing is
not to be considered as excluding other, additional components or items. Other terms
are to be construed using their broadest reasonable meaning unless they are used in
a context that requires a different interpretation. In addition, the term "and/or"
is to be construed as an inclusive OR. Therefore, for example, the phrase "A, B, and/or
C" is to be interpreted as covering all the following: "A"; "B"; "C"; "A and B"; "A
and C"; "B and C"; and "A, B, and C."
1. A vehicle interior panel (14), comprising:
a substrate (30) having a thickness between 0.5 mm and 2.25 mm, inclusive;
a decorative layer (28); and
an intermediate layer (32) located between the substrate (30) and the decorative layer
(28), wherein a post-form warpage of the substrate (30) is less than 15 mm at an edge
region of the substrate (30).
2. The vehicle interior panel of claim 1, wherein the edge region is a windshield edge
(18) and the post-form warpage is in a Z direction.
3. The vehicle interior panel of claim 2, further comprising a serpentine rib (50) located
near the windshield edge (18).
4. The vehicle interior panel of claim 3, wherein an extension flange (48) is located
at least partially between the windshield edge (18) and the serpentine rib (50).
5. The vehicle interior panel of claim 4, wherein the extension flange (48) extends out
from the windshield edge (18) in an X direction and the serpentine rib (50) projects
from the extension flange (48) in the Z direction.
6. The vehicle interior panel of claim 4, wherein the serpentine rib (50) is located
along a majority of a distal edge of the extension flange (48).
7. The vehicle interior panel of claim 4, wherein the windshield edge (18) has a primary
arc (58), the extension flange (48) has a primary arc (56), and the serpentine rib
(50) has a primary arc (60), and each primary arc is configured to match a contour
of a windshield.
8. The vehicle interior panel of claim 3, wherein the serpentine rib (50) includes a
plurality of undulations (62).
9. The vehicle interior panel of claim 8, wherein each undulation (62) has a peak (66)
and the peak (66) is an angle between 30° and 60°, inclusive.
10. The vehicle interior panel of claim 8, wherein the plurality of undulations (62) includes
more than 20 undulations.
11. The vehicle interior panel of claim 8, wherein each undulation (62) has an amplitude
(A) and a wavelength (A), and a ratio of the amplitude to the wavelength is between
1:6 and 1:2, inclusive.
12. A method of manufacturing the vehicle interior panel (14) of claim 1, comprising the
steps of:
molding the substrate (30); and
foaming a foam layer (32) between the decorative layer (28) and the substrate (30)
to form the intermediate layer.
13. The method of manufacturing of claim 12, wherein the substrate (30) is molded with
a serpentine rib (50).
14. The method of manufacturing of claim 13, wherein the serpentine rib (50) is located
on an extension flange (48).
15. The method of manufacturing of claim 14, further comprising the step of removing the
serpentine rib (50) and the extension flange (48) after the foaming step.